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Liveable Newcastle

Liveable Newcastle

Why Liveable Newcastle?

You told us that you want a Liveable Newcastle. Liveable Newcastle is about creating a great city for our community to live in, and supporting all members of our community to succeed and live well.

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The following priorities have been identified as key to achieving a Liveable Newcastle:

“ Newcastle could be the world’s greenest, safest, most self-sufficient, innovative and liveable city” – Online survey

“ Newcastle hasn’t lost its roots - there’s pride in the area. People look you in the eye. People are proud” – Count Us In event

“ There is potential for diverse, lively and vibrant urban areas to cater for people’s needs” – Count Us In event

Enriched neighbourhoods and places

Places are well planned to be meaningful, engaging and accessible to all. Sustainable, healthy and inclusive streets, open spaces, and neighbourhood centres with unique character and heritage are important. We value public places supported by planned infrastructure that bring people together for active living and social connection. Pride in the culture and heritage of our city enhances our sense of identity.

Connected and fair communities

Connected and fair communities value all people and embrace diversity. We are respectful of culture and work towards inclusion to achieve a sense of belonging for all. We promote health, wellbeing, digital inclusion and equal opportunities to improve quality of life.

Safe, active and linked movement across the city

Moving across the city with ease is important to the liveability of Newcastle. Diverse transport options, active travel and safe roads play a major role in keeping us physically connected to work, leisure and services. Active transport becomes the preferred transport method for people of Newcastle. Every time someone rides or walks to work, to university, to the beach or to the local shops instead of using a car means less congestion, less noise, less pollution and better streetscapes for people.

Innovative and connected city

A city that confidently harnesses innovation and technology will ensure increased quality of living for all. We consider digital infrastructure in our planning and development to futureproof our city and local centres. We utilise digital infrastructure and emerging technologies to better identify and service community needs, improve efficiency and increase city amenity.

Deliver Partner Advocate

Priorities and objectives

1.1 Enriched neighbourhoods and places

1.1.1 Great spaces

Provide quality, stimulating and inclusive leisure, learning and recreation options that enable all people to participate and thrive.

1.1.2 Well-designed places

Prioritise, create and maintain contemporary, sustainable, healthy and inclusive streets, buildings, neighbourhoods, local centres and facilities that result in better places to live, work and enjoy.

1.1.3 Protected heritage places

Conserve and protect our rich cultural heritage places, as they provide local character and enhance our sense of identity.

1.2 Connected and fair communities

1.2.1 Connected communities

Support diverse communities to build strong social and cultural connections through tolerance, participation and inclusion, so that everyone feels welcome in Newcastle and enjoys a sense of belonging and place.

1.2.2 Inclusive communities

Recognise, acknowledge and celebrate the Awabakal and Worimi people’s strength, resilience and living culture. Champion inclusion across our community so that everyone is supported, valued and respected.

1.2.3 Equitable communities

Support access to affordable, sustainable and inclusive housing, food, services, programs and facilities to improve quality of life and the strength of our community.

1.2.4 Healthy communities

Promote and support active and healthy communities that have strong physical, mental and spiritual health and feel safe and secure in the city.

1.4.1 Emerging technologies

Embrace emerging technologies, creative ideas and new approaches to address city challenges and improve quality of life for the community.

1.3 Safe, active and linked movement across the city

1.3.1 Connected cycleways and pedestrian networks

Provide safe and connected networks, making active movement a convenient, accessible way of getting around.

1.3.2 Road networks

Manage and maintain local road networks to connect people and places comfortably across the city.

1.3.3 Managed parking

Manage parking to improve the amenity of our streets, support the accessibility of our centres, and encourage a shift to active and public transport.

1.3.4 Effective public transport

Support the implementation of regional transport strategies and plans and public transport network improvements to allow easy movement across the city.

1.4 Innovative and connected city

1.4.2 Digital inclusion and social innovation

Support capacity-building and inclusive digital access to narrow the digital divide and ensure the benefits of innovation are applied equitably across the community.

Elsa Licumba

As a migrant herself, Elsa Licumba knows all too well that a sense of belonging is important for everyone to have. After the culture shock of leaving Mozambique and arriving to study in Australia, she felt what it was like to lose herself between places and become invisible to society. To regain her sense of belonging, she realised she had to change her mindset and first give herself the freedom to belong.

Elsa authored Freedom to Belong, a book to show how she and other migrants could reinvent themselves and their identities while living in a foreign land. She also founded a support service with the same name to help migrants find their place in a new country.

Having lived in Newcastle for 10 years now, Elsa finds the city’s appeal as strong as ever. She has always found it to be a welcoming city and that its citizens are inclusive, multicultural and focused on the wellbeing of the area and each other.

At home, she loves to garden. Creating something that lives and thrives under her care and the act of putting roots down helps to remind her that she is doing the same thing here in the Newcastle community.

‘I want every single migrant to understand that belonging has nothing to do with a place. You can have two homes if you want to – this place, the city of Newcastle, can be your home too,’ says Elsa.

Community indicators

The wellbeing of our city and community. CN uses these indicators to track trends to ensure that we are moving towards our vision.

Overall quality of life in Newcastle (Source: CN Liveability and Wellbeing Survey) Rental Affordability Index (RAI) (Source: SGS Economics and Planning) Travel patterns on an average weekday for residents (Source: NSW Transport - Household Travel Survey (HTS)) Number of recorded criminal incidents for major offences (Source: NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research)

Potentially preventable hospitalisations (Source: NSW Health Stats)

Newcastle digital inclusion index score (Source: National digital inclusion data)

Service indicators

The high-level impact of CN’s service delivery on our city and community. CN uses these indicators to track progress and performance against our service delivery and to guide our decision-making.

Social Infrastructure index score: % of residents that live within a designated distance (walkable) of community facilities, public transport (train stations and bus stops), recreation facilities, local centres, and parks (Source: GIS mapped data) Cycle-friendly and walkable city (Source: CN Liveability and Wellbeing Survey)

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